
Bruce MacGregor
Bruce MacGregor joined the Edmonton Oil Kings in 1957 and led the team to the Memorial Cup final. At 19, Bruce turned professional and played with the Edmonton Flyers before making it to the NHL. He reached the Stanley Cup finals four times with the Detroit Red Wings and once with the New York Rangers in 1972. A steady, hard-working player, he scored 213 goals with 257 assists in 893 NHL games. He also played with the World Hockey Association Edmonton Oilers for two seasons, scoring 75 points. Bruce played for Canada in the 1974 Summit Series against the Soviets.
Anne Mackie Morelli
Anne Mackie Morelli was a track athlete that competed in distance races up to the 800m. The 800m became her specialty. She was either the Indoor or Outdoor Canadian Champion over that distance from 1977 to 1980. Anne also won several medals in International competition. These include a bronze in the 4 x 400m relay at the 1978 Commonwealth Games and fourth in the 800m at the 1979 Pan American Games. She finished third at the Liberty Bell Track Meet -- an alternate competition to the 1980 Olympic Games, that was boycotted by Canada.
Carla MacLeod
Carla MacLeod was a defenceman for Team Canada for six seasons. She won Olympic gold at the 2006 Torino Olympics and the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. She also won gold at the 2007 IIHF World Women's Championships and silver in 2005, 2008 & 2009. She played in five 4 Nations Cup Tournaments, gathering three gold and two silver medals. She was named to the Media All-Star Team twice. A strong leader and supportive teammate, she scored 14 goals and had 30 assists for 44 points in 81 games. With the Calgary Oval X-Treme, Carla won three National Championships in 1998, 2001, and 2007.
Clifford Ross Manahan
Clifford Manahan took up curling in 1916 but it wasn't until 1926 when he moved to Edmonton that he played competitively. In the following twenty-three years, he won sixty-five championships. He won the Brier Tankard in 1933 and again in 1937. He tied for second place in the 1950 Brier, and was third in 1940. Clifford Manahan was eight times the Alberta Consols champion and the Northern champion nine times.
Harold Mandeville
Harold Mandeville won titles at the Canadian Championships in three different events -- bareback riding, calf roping and steer wrestling. He is a five-time Canadian Steer Wrestling Champion and a winner of Canadian titles in calf roping and bareback riding. In 1951 at the Calgary Stampede, he won the All-Round Canadian title. Six years later, he also won the steer decorating event. Harold Mandeville won his first championship in 1946 and his last championship in 1966. At the age of forty, he became the oldest cowboy to claim the Canadian All-Round Championship.
Henry Martell
Henry Martell gained prominence in golf in 1934 when he captured the Edmonton City Open. He then went on to win the Edmonton City Amateur thirteen times, and the Alberta Amateur nine times. He won the Alberta, Saskatchewan and Ontario Open Championships and the Canadian Amateur Championship in 1946. Henry Martell turned professional in 1948 and won three more national titles including the Canadian Professional Golfers' Association and the Canadian Professional Golf Association Senior Championship. He represented Canada in several International tournaments during his golf career.

Kevin Martin
Kevin Martin is the most decorated curler in Canadian history. A three-time Olympian, he won the gold medal in the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics and a silver medal in 2002. Curling was a demonstration sport at his first Olympics in 1992. Kevin won four Brier titles and World Championship gold in 2008. He is a 12-time provincial champion and was the Junior Men’s Alberta Champion in 1985. Kevin was instrumental in the creation and development of the Grand Slam series for world-class curlers. He won 18 Grand Slam Championships and was the first curler to win each event and achieve the "career Grand Slam."
Reg McClellan
Reg McClellan played wheelchair basketball from 1973-1988. He was a founding member of the Alberta Northern Lights Wheelchair Basketball program in 1976, and was their GM in 1987/1988. Reg played with the Canadian National Team for twenty years (team’s Most Valuable Player ten times). He played on six World Cup Championships teams and four Paralympic teams. He coached the Canadian National Team from 1983 to 1986. Reg became the basketball Executive Director for the Canadian Wheelchair Sports Association in 1988, the Executive Director of the CWBA from 1994-1999, and served as President of the IWBF Development Commission from 1989-1998.
Heather McDermid
Heather McDermid won All-American honours in 1989 for track & field while attending Rice University in Houston. An ankle injury ended her track career. Heather learned to row at the Calgary Rowing Club; and two years later, in 1994, she made the Canadian National Team. Heather brought her athletic ability and competitive spirit to rowing. She competed at two Olympic Games as a member of the women’s eights rowing team. At the 1996 Atlanta Summer Olympic Games the team rowed to a silver medal finish, and at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Summer Games, they won the bronze medal.
Lanny McDonald
Lanny McDonald went from playing minor hockey in Hanna - to winning the 1989 Stanley Cup - as a right-winger and co-captain of the Calgary Flames. During his junior years in the WHL, he earned 253 points in 136 games. Lanny played his first NHL game in 1973 with the Toronto Maple Leafs. He was traded from the Colorado Rockies to the Calgary Flames in 1981. He scored 500 regular-season goals and had 506 assists. He played in four NHL All-Star Games. Lanny McDonald's #9 jersey has been retired and hangs from the rafters of the Calgary Saddledome